Papa, Can You Hear Me?

God is our Provider and that we are not self-sufficient after all. 
It is He who gives to His beloved even in their sleep.
God owns us - our work, our career, our business, and our family. 
The skills we have and the time we spend are only on loan to us. 
Life is no longer an issue of ownership but of management.


Scenes from an Americal add: 

Little Boy: Dad, can we go swimming?
Young Dad: I really would like to, Son, but we just opened our new plant, and I just can't take the time off right now.

Teenager: Dad, can we go fishing together?  
Middle-aged Dad: I really would like to, Son, but we just opened a new plant in Europe and I have to be there. But I promise I'll take some time off when I get back. 

Old Dad: Son, do you think you could take a little time off to go fishing with me? Since your Mom died, it sure has been lonely around here. 
Young Man: I wish I could, Dad, but you know we just opened a new plant in Japan and I have to be there. But I promise I'll take some time off when I get back. 


Business bondage. This is what entangles most fathers. It comes in many forms. It could be an insatiable appetite to expand one's business empire. Or it may just be a case of being overly dedicated to work. However you may want to put it, it is that which interferes with your relationship with God and family. Some call it the unbalanced life. 

Living in today's world offers countless choices that can satisfy us. But, sad to say, even if most offer only fleeting, momentary satisfaction, we still drive ourselves crazy in work just to attain them. This often results in a deeper emotional investment that robs us of a more meaningful life. In our desperate pursuit, we fall into a trap until we are in bondage to our work. 

Psalm 127:1-2, "Unless the Lord builds the house, its builders labor in vain. Unless the Lord watches over the city, the watchmen stand guard in vain. In vain you rise early and stay up late, toiling for food to eat - for He grants sleep to those He loves" (NIV). 

I had once come to a point where I firmly believed that success belonged to those who gave  all their time, all their strength, and all their dedication to work. This was what I exactly gave - my all. And then one day, it suddenly dawned on me that my children were growing up so fast and I hardly spent quality time with them. It scared me that I knew so little of them and, worse, that they knew so little of me. 

Another deep realization came. 

Let us break free from the bondage of our career. Jesus Christ has set us free. If He is not Lord of all, He is not Lord at all. All includes our time and our business. Or, should I say, His time and His business.